Andrea Camilleri Commissario Montalbano 27 ... Page
If you have read the previous 26 novels, you must read this one. It’s the closing of a chapter in crime fiction. If you are new to Montalbano, for heaven’s sake, start with The Shape of Water (Book #1). This is not an entry point; it’s a farewell.
★★★★☆ (4/5)
This meta-fictional twist is jarring at first, but it becomes the novel’s secret weapon. It’s Camilleri’s wry, loving farewell. He knows we know this is the end, and he uses the artificiality of the detective genre to explore the very real fatigue of a man who has seen too much crime. Andrea Camilleri Commissario Montalbano 27 ...
The final pages—featuring a last phone call, a last meal, and a last walk on the beach—are devastatingly beautiful. Camilleri lets Montalbano fade out not with a bang, but with a quiet, knowing sigh. If you have read the previous 26 novels,
A man in a clown mask is shot dead outside a church. The victim is named Riccardino. The killer immediately surrenders, claiming self-defense. But nothing is that simple in Vigàta. The case unravels into a labyrinth of family secrets, hired guns, and a mysterious foreign countess. Meanwhile, Montalbano feels the weight of every one of his years. This is not an entry point; it’s a farewell
Addio, Salvo. It was a pleasure.